¡¿More moretprs?! Do we really need more more? I do. I want one place to go on-line to keep track of it all. I have TPRS resources on my browser bookmarks list, on my delicious.com account list, and in my Google Reader RSS feed (or did until Google made it all disappear without warning) . But the more that wonderful on-line resources emerge, the more scattered I seem to get in my ability to remember where and what they are. So this is for me to try to keep it all together in one place- my point of entry into the world of TPRS people and resources. If it is useful to someone else, great; and if others will contribute to it, more great.
Discussion can preferably continue to take place at the two existing moretprs discussion places. This is a place to record links and resources, and annotate why they might be interesting or useful. Here are links to some of the leaders in the field: TPRS people and resources. And here are some TPRS textbooks and readers.
This is also a place where TPRS colleagues who haven't yet discovered the world of wikis, can play with the idea and learn how they might use wiki websites for their own instructional, professional development, or other purposes.
More TPRS Wiki
moretprs Yahoo! group- a help-list for users of TPRS, a method of second language acquisition
TPRStalk.com- TPRS discussion and support forum (was moreTPRS.net)
NTPRS 2013- blogs, etc.
¡¿More moretprs?! Do we really need more more? I do. I want one place to go on-line to keep track of it all. I have TPRS resources on my browser bookmarks list, on my delicious.com account list, and in my Google Reader RSS feed (or did until Google made it all disappear without warning) . But the more that wonderful on-line resources emerge, the more scattered I seem to get in my ability to remember where and what they are. So this is for me to try to keep it all together in one place- my point of entry into the world of TPRS people and resources. If it is useful to someone else, great; and if others will contribute to it, more great.
Discussion can preferably continue to take place at the two existing moretprs discussion places. This is a place to record links and resources, and annotate why they might be interesting or useful. Here are links to some of the leaders in the field: TPRS people and resources. And here are some TPRS textbooks and readers.
This is also a place where TPRS colleagues who haven't yet discovered the world of wikis, can play with the idea and learn how they might use wiki websites for their own instructional, professional development, or other purposes.
Thank you for visiting.
Dick Detwiler- e-mail